en·am·oured British EnglishBrE, enamored American English /ɪˈnæməd $ -ərd/ adjectiveadj 1 LIKE somebody OR something[not before noun] liking something very much 〔对某物〕喜爱的,迷恋的enamoured of/with You don’t seem very enamoured with your job. 你好像不太喜欢你的工作。
2 formalLIKE somebody OR something in love with someone 〔对某人〕倾心的,迷恋的enamoured of/with He was greatly enamoured of Elizabeth. 他对伊丽莎白十分倾心。
enamoured of/with• Among those not wholly enamoured of Eardwulf was Alcuin.• The Colonel, son of the aforementioned Marquis, comes to inspect the troops and becomes enamoured of Gertrudis' beauty.• Both, it seems, became enamoured of him.• Narcissus was a young man who spurned the nymph Echo and became enamoured of his own reflection.• It wasn't that Katherine wasn't enamoured of Paris.• The Renaissance became enamoured of perspective, indeed Vasari thought that Paolo Uccello took it too seriously.• Not all feminists were so enamoured with such tactics.• It was said that he was not enamoured of the tight business disciplines which they attempted to impose. enamoured of/with• Among those not wholly enamoured of Eardwulf was Alcuin.• The Colonel, son of the aforementioned Marquis, comes to inspect the troops and becomes enamoured of Gertrudis' beauty.• Both, it seems, became enamoured of him.• Narcissus was a young man who spurned the nymph Echo and became enamoured of his own reflection.• It wasn't that Katherine wasn't enamoured of Paris.• The Renaissance became enamoured of perspective, indeed Vasari thought that Paolo Uccello took it too seriously.• Not all feminists were so enamoured with such tactics.• It was said that he was not enamoured of the tight business disciplines which they attempted to impose.